Ursula eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Ursula.

Ursula eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Ursula.

The Loing runs through the town in a waving line, banked by terraced gardens and neat houses, the aspect of which makes one fancy that happiness must abide there sooner than elsewhere.  When the doctor turned into the Rue des Bourgeois, Minoret-Levrault pointed out the property of Levrault-Levrault, a rich iron merchant in Paris who, he said, had just died.

“The place is for sale, uncle, and a very pretty house it is; there’s a charming garden running down to the river.”

“Let us go in,” said the doctor, seeing, at the farther end of a small paved courtyard, a house standing between the walls of the two neighbouring houses which were masked by clumps of trees and climbing-plants.

“It is built over a cellar,” said the doctor, going up the steps of a high portico adorned with vases of blue and white pottery in which geraniums were growing.

Cut in two, like the majority of provincial houses, by a long passage which led from the courtyard to the garden, the house had only one room to the right, a salon lighted by four windows, two on the courtyard and two on the garden; but Levrault-Levrault had used one of these windows to make an entrance to a long greenhouse built of brick which extended from the salon towards the river, ending in a horrible Chinese pagoda.

“Good! by building a roof to that greenhouse and laying a floor,” said old Minoret, “I could put my book there and make a very comfortable study of that extraordinary bit of architecture at the end.”

On the other side of the passage, toward the garden, was the dining-room, decorated in imitation of black lacquer with green and gold flowers; this was separated from the kitchen by the well of the staircase.  Communication with the kitchen was had through a little pantry built behind the staircase, the kitchen itself looking into the courtyard through windows with iron railings.  There were two chambers on the next floor, and above them, attic rooms sheathed in wood, which were fairly habitable.  After examining the house rapidly, and observing that it was covered with trellises from top to bottom, on the side of the courtyard as well as on that to the garden,—­which ended in a terrace overlooking the river and adorned with pottery vases,—­the doctor remarked:—­

“Levrault-Levrault must have spend a good deal of money here.”

“Ho!  I should think so,” answered Minoret-Levrault.  “He liked flowers —­nonsense!  ‘What do they bring in?’ says my wife.  You saw inside there how an artist came from Paris to paint flowers in fresco in the corridor.  He put those enormous mirrors everywhere.  The ceilings were all re-made with cornices which cost six francs a foot.  The dining-room floor is in marquetry—­perfect folly!  The house won’t sell for a penny the more.”

“Well, nephew, buy it for me:  let me know what you do about it; here’s my address.  The rest I leave to my notary.  Who lives opposite?” he asked, as they left the house.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Ursula from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.